52 -;. .. .. .. .- .. -. .. . .. .- .- .- .. .- .- .- .. .- .- .- .- .- .- .- .- .- .- .- :: cttl . aAOll TRE AI- "fLUESEC TOUR. k. .'" ./T' 't \ R -;. ugged pine-clothed mountains p: ìf'; ,cradling. more than 2000 lakes of \ ' 1 wondrous beauty! ) J- .. (I ;1" Turbulent rivers-gentle brooks . J1ifR ' . -majestic forests and valleys I ii \- ..-' \ '\ che hed by nature in her \\ p ,\ \ happiest mood. >::::_ I \ \\ The great Adirondacks ,. ,," -the Summer Paradise of '\ , iJ ' '{. the World-invites all in , " J" search of rest and recre.. , t" tt, I at ion; No other section of / I , '\ _ the Wodd provides greater i I , eauty, more sport, more j (I FL ,) r g JOY! Fol" Booklets and Map write I r VfIh ADIRONDACK RESORTS ASS'N /I; 1 ;'--' - Port Kent, N. Y. MO TREAL TOURIST & CONVENTION " . BUREAU, New Birks Building ' '" Montreal, P. Q. "'-1!f1j . I . ' (} __ .,:<; .! - .. . .. .. -. -. -. -. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. -. .. -. .. .. .. -. -. -. .. .- .- CGhe lAP ANESE & THE ROOF GARDEN GARDEN OF THE RITZ CARLTON NEW YORK Are Now Open For LUNCHEON, TEA & DINNER RITZ CARLTON Boston, Massachusetts Atlantic City, N. J. ALBERT KELLER, President JUNE I b, I 18 the United States Lawn Tennis As- sociation is not one happy, united family. Sectional feeling exists to a considerable degree, just as it has been existing in the East between the Philadelphia and New York tennis coteries. With Tilden lost to the Clay Court, after playing in it regularly, and Hennessey and Lott also unavailable, the Western Association couldn't see itself shouldering the re- sponsibility and work attached to stag- ing a national championship. R the annual meeting of the U.S.L.T.A. in Chicago, the rule on the books that states that players' expenses shall not be paid in a national championship was made applicable to the clay court as well as to the turf event. Tilden took the officials of the Missouri Valley Association in St. Louis to task for allowiI?-g this interpretation I of the rule to be put over without a fight. He told them that it was going I to hurt the Clay Court championship ' I badly, that it would be impossible to get players to come to the Middle West i for the tournament from the East, the South, and the far West, if their ex- penses weren't paid. The only response that the Davis : Cup captain got for his altruistic efforts Ion behalf of the tournament was from Drummond Jones, who ran the tourna- ment some five or six years ago when it was held in St. Louis. "You know," said Tilden, "that you aren't going to get the players if you don't pay their expenses." "You know," answered the laconic Mr. Jones, "that I know you know it." Further than that he had no interest in the matter, washed his hands of it, and apparently the whole West feels the same way. -A. D. . The pleasure of conducting a group of tourists on a month's yachting trip be- tween June 16th and August 20 has been accorded Guy Snavely, president of Birmingham Southern College. Dr. Snavely was formerly head of the Ro- mance Department at Allegheny.-Al- legheny College Campus. Going ahead with his work. .